I agree with everything there except the prayer circle. Why bring voodoo in on this?

What do you mean you agree with everything but the prayer circle? You have no say about it; it's none of your business. It's the family's business. Obviously, they either are ok with it, and/or asked him for it.

Life threatening events help bring back the priorities in life. He is just coming off that same injury and remembers how damn scary it is when something you have never heard of happens to you and the Doctor says we may take your leg or you may die.

Good to see that a horrible tragic injury in this kids life has impacted him enough to be more focused on helping others. I hope he loses the "Rahim the Dream" mentality all together and becomes the act of kindness and tremendous character he just did for that family.

Again, people tend to be all or nothing on people. And, athletes often get judged by people for what they screw up doing off the field. It affects our general perceptions of them as players as well.

This just shows the complexity of human behavior and the ability of human beings to be relational and not so damn selfish. I truly despise the incredibly entitled professional athletes and their me first mentality that simply represents this new generation of Americans. And then, I hear a story like this that never gets its due in the media. Congrats Rahim for being a standup human being and giving a crap about someone other than yourself. Not enough of that happens anymore, especially in pro sports.

Here is to you locking that mentality down and doing it for the team this year. Become the best you can be on and off the field and stop being the self promoter. We will all be better for it!

Eager to help, Moore stunned the family by walking into the hospital half an hour later.

"Everybody was blown away when Rahim walked in," said Kim Winterfield, the aunt of Tyson Goulding, 35, a Denver man who suffered compartment syndrome during a 10K race and, like Moore, nearly lost his leg. "The compassion, the talking, the getting to the hospital in no time was unbelievable... We're just ordinary people."

For Moore, a former UCLA standout drafted in the second round by Denver in 2011, simply walking through those hospital doors brought back a flood of feelings from last November, when his career — and his life — dangled in the balance.

"It brought back memories," he said in a phone interview. "It was about 4 or 5 [in the morning] when I came in, and I remember my doctor told me, 'Rahim, if we'd waited until later in the morning, we'd have to amputate your leg. If you'd have waited until noon, you'd have passed away.' I couldn't believe it..."

Oh for heaven’s sake, it’s one play. We’re more classy than Boston fans holding a grudge against Buckner all those years. I hope a few of you get judged by the single biggest mistake you made this year for eternity

BTW- we should’ve pressed Jones coming off the line. That’s on the coaches.

Oh for heaven’s sake, it’s one play. We’re more classy than Boston fans holding a grudge against Buckner all those years. I hope a few of you get judged by the single biggest mistake you made this year for eternity

BTW- we should’ve pressed Jones coming off the line. That’s on the coaches.